Heroes and heroines frequently have green eyes : Harry
Potter, Alaska in John Green’s Looking
for Alaska, etc. Apparently, genuinely green eyes are actually very rare,
representing 1-2% of the population.
Heroes are rarely less than average height which is a true
anomaly. As I am of less than average height, this is distinctly heightism and
is statistically unbalanced. Average height is the best height in survival
terms. If it was not, we would evolve a new average height. Then again, heroic
tallness is dangerous and suffers under Darwinian selection.
With the centenary of the beginning of the First World War
there is an explosion of books about soldiers.
An extraordinary proportion of the eligible males in Australia
volunteered, but it was probably less than half the population. What proportion
of stories will be about these stay at home men? And don’t forget the ‘tall bronzed
Anzac”. Possibly bronzed due to their
infamous stay in Egypt but history shows Anzacs were no taller than any other
soldiers. Armies had height restrictions so the soldiers’ heights were not
necessarily representative of the population.
Saga Noren, the female lead detective in the Danish-Swedish
thriller The Bridge is widely
perceived as having a form of autism. Apparently Sherlock Holmes in Sherlock has too. Something like 1.4% of males and 0.5% of
females are diagnosed with autism. I can
cope with this trend if it produces more characters like the delightful Candice
in My life as an Alphabet (Barry
Jonsberg).
Orphans are over-represented. As nowadays maternal death
rates are vanishingly small, and characters who have lost their mothers this
way are exceptionally unlucky. A quick look at Magpies’ The Source shows 180 books on orphans.
Would you guess, from fiction of all forms, that there are
actually more Hispanic people than Afro-Americans in the United States of
America?
Perhaps the “average” does not make a striking story or
character. Have you noticed other
“minority” trends?
PS For truly statistical anomalies, think green sheep or
talking dragons.
Richard Pickup
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